Opinion
Does a state employee’s resignation following his termination without due process cut off his remedies for the procedurally improper termination? If not, to what backpay is the employee entitled due to the procedurally improper termination? Is the employee entitled to reinstatement, or must the matter be remanded to the State Personnel Board (Personnel Board or Board) for a determination of the merits of the employer’s charges of misconduct?
In this case, we conclude that the Personnel Board erred in determining that Deputy Attorney General Robert Roe, who was terminated without due process, resigned effective September 24, 1992, and in limiting Roe’s back-pay award accordingly. Roe is entitled to backpay through May 5, 1999, the date of the Personnel Board’s decision after hearings on the merits of the *1033 Department of Justice’s charges against Roe. In an unpublished portion of this decision we conclude that this matter must be remanded to the Personnel Board to determine whether there was good cause to terminate Roe based on the evidence already heard.
Factual and Procedural Background
On August 25, 1992, the Department of Justice mailed Robert Roe a notice of adverse action 1 dismissing him for cause from his position as a Deputy Attorney General effective August 31, 1992. The Department charged Roe with dishonesty, willful disobedience, misuse of state property, and general failure of qualifications and good behavior. The charges stemmed from Roe’s alleged unauthorized removal of two computer printers from the offices of the Attorney General.
Roe’s Letter of Resignation
On August 31, Roe’s counsel, Roger Patton, met with Assistant Attorney General George Williamson, the Department Shelly officer, 2 and proposed various resolutions short of dismissal; he told Williamson that the Department had not given Roe adequate notice of termination. During the subsequent few weeks, Patton suggested resolutions involving Roe resigning at a later date. Williamson was not receptive. Patton and Williamson scheduled the Shelly hearing for September 24 at 2:00 p.m. Patton testified that Williamson warned him on September 23 that for Roe to avoid discipline he would have to submit his resignation by the 24th. Williamson testified that he did not recall such a conversation, but his testimony was discredited by the Personnel Board.
On September 24, 1992, at 11:14 a.m., about three hours before the scheduled Shelly hearing, Patton faxed Williamson a letter of resignation signed by Roe, which stated “I hereby resign from my position as a deputy attorney general effective today at 5:00 p.m.” Patton’s cover letter stated in part, “Enclosed is [Roe’s] letter of resignation from his position as Deputy Attorney General. Our understanding is that this terminates the employment *1034 relationship and any pending disciplinary proceeding. [Citation.]” The Department never responded. In November, when Roe asked his union representative to inquire about his backpay and benefits, he learned for the first time that the Department took the position that he was terminated on August 31, 1992.
Personnel Board Proceedings
On December 23, 1992, the Department filed an amended notice of adverse action with the Personnel Board, changing the effective date of the adverse action from August 31 to September 24, 1992. Roe filed an answer to the amended notice, asserting that he resigned September 24 pursuant to an agreement with the Department. In response, the Department tried to withdraw its amended notice, on the new theory that the Board was without jurisdiction because Roe’s termination had actually become final on September 14, twenty days after service of the original notice. 3 The Personnel Board adopted the administrative law judge’s (ALJ) proposed decision, which concluded that the Board did not have jurisdiction to consider the matter because Roe had not timely appealed his termination.
First Writ of Mandate Proceedings
Roe petitioned for a writ of mandate directing the Department to vacate the August 31, 1992, dismissal and reinstate him. The superior court granted the petition and found (1) that the Personnel Board erred in denying jurisdiction; and (2) that Roe had been terminated without due process. The court directed the Department to set aside the dismissal and to reinstate him.
On appeal, this court concluded that the Personnel Board had jurisdiction to decide Roe’s appeal on the merits. (Roe v. State Personnel Board (Jan. 15, 1998, A075617) [nonpub. opn.] (Roe I).) The superior court had reached the same conclusion and to that extent we affirmed the superior court judgment. This court also concluded that the superior court erred by deciding the question of whether Roe was denied pretermination due process instead of remanding to the Personnel Board for further proceedings and to that extent reversed the lower court judgment. We directed the superior court to enter a new judgment granting the petition for writ of mandate and remanding the matter to the Personnel Board with instructions to hear Roe’s appeal. 4
*1035 On remand, an ALJ for the Personnel Board conducted hearings and admitted evidence regarding the underlying claims of misconduct, Roe’s termination, and subsequent events. In its proposed decision, the ALJ found that the August 31 termination was invalid because Roe was not provided adequate notice and that Roe resigned effective September 24. The proposed decision awarded Roe backpay for the period September 1 through 24, 1992. The Personnel Board adopted the proposed decision at its meeting on May 4 and 5, 1999.
Second Writ of Mandate Proceedings
Roe filed another petition for writ of mandate challenging the finding that he resigned effective September 24 and the resulting award of limited backpay. The superior court granted the petition on December 4, 2001. The court rejected the Personnel Board’s conclusion that Roe’s resignation was effective, reasoning that as of the date of Roe’s resignation, the Department itself maintained the position that Roe had been terminated on August 31. The Personnel Board’s “determination that Roe resigned his position effective September 24, 1992, is not supported by substantial evidence since, as of the time of the purported resignation, [the Department was] of the belief that Roe’s employment had been terminated on August 31, 1992.”
On March 1, 2002, the superior court issued a writ of mandate directing the Personnel Board to vacate its decision and “enter a new order reinstating Roe, and awarding Roe backpay, with interest, and benefits, for the period September 1, 1992, through April 30, 1999, less interim wages earned. (See
Barber v. State Personnel Board
(1976)
Both parties appeal. The Department assigns error to the superior court issuance of the writ directing the State Personnel Board to order the reinstatement of Roe with backpay from September 1, 1992, through April 30, 1999. The Department argues that Roe resigned effective September 24, 1992, and is not entitled to reinstatement or backpay after that date. Roe cross-appeals, contending that his entitlement to backpay continued after April 30, 1999, the date of the ALJ’s proposed decision.
*1036 Discussion
I. Standard of Review *
II. Roe’s Resignation Following His Termination Did Not Extinguish His Right to Backpay for the Department’s Violation of Due Process
The first question we address is whether Roe’s resignation following his termination without due process extinguished his right to backpay for the illegal termination. The Personnel Board answered this question in the affirmative by concluding that because Roe resigned on September 24, 1992, he is not entitled to backpay after that date. The superior court vacated that portion of the Board’s determination as not supported by substantial evidence “since, as of the time of the purported resignation, [the Department was] of the belief that Roe’s employment had been terminated on August 31, 1992.”
The Department contends that the superior court erred because the evidence plainly demonstrates that Roe resigned effective September 24, 1992. That is beside the point. There is no factual dispute that on September 24 Roe faxed a resignation letter to the Department’s
Skelly
officer, effective that same day.
6
The issue before us is whether the Personnel Board erred in concluding that Roe’s resignation cuts off an award of backpay after September 24 for the due process violation. This is a question of law which we review de novo.
(Bostean, (1998)
The Department contends that under section 19996.1 of the Government Code, Roe’s resignation resulted in a permanent separation without right to reinstatement because he did not petition to set aside the resignation
*1037
within 30 days.
7
We disagree. As Roe argues,
Lucas
v.
State of California
(1997)
In
Lucas,
a state civil service employee was terminated for cause and appealed to the Personnel Board.
(Lucas, supra,
The Fourth District reversed. At the outset, the court defined the issue before it as whether Lucas’s retirement “extinguished” his right to be reinstated once the state withdrew the termination.
(Lucas, supra,
We reject the Department’s argument that Lucas turns on the fact that the employee retired rather than resigned. A close reading of Lucas reveals that although the court did point out that the Government Code distinguishes between service retirement and resignation and that Lucas did not resign (Lucas, supra, 58 Cal.App.4th at pp. 750-751), the court’s holding did not turn on that distinction. That distinction would have provided a basis to conclude that section 19996.1 was inapplicable because that section only bars reinstatements after resignations. That distinction would not, however, have provided a basis to conclude that section 19140 was inapplicable because that section applies to reinstatements following both resignations and retirements. Despite the court’s emphasis on the difference between resignation and retirement, the court’s holding that both statutes were inapplicable turned on its conclusion that it was the termination, rather than the retirement, that separated Lucas from service. 9
The Department also cites
Coleman
v.
Department of Personnel Administration
(1991)
*1039
Finally, in support of its position that the Personnel Board correctly concluded that Roe’s resignation extinguished his entitlement to remedies for the improper discharge, the Department argues that Roe’s resignation was effective on September 24 without any need for acceptance and that its failure to expressly accept or reject Roe’s resignation is of no consequence. Underlying the Department’s argument is the assumption that once the August 31, 1992, termination was invalidated, Roe’s September 24, 1992, resignation became operative and controlling. This assumption fails to recognize the core principle of
Lucas:
an employee’s retirement after involuntary termination does not bar reinstatement. Although the August 31 termination was not legally valid, it was
in effect
at the time Roe submitted his resignation. Indeed, the termination was in effect until May 1999, when the Personnel Board set aside the dismissal due to the
Shelly
violation. (See
Skelly, supra,
III. Due to the Procedurally Improper Termination, Roe Is Entitled to Backpay Through the Date of the Second Personnel Board Decision
It is undisputed that the termination of Roe effective August 31, 1992, was in violation of Roe’s right to due process.
(Skelly, supra,
*1040
The California civil service employment scheme confers upon permanent employees “a property interest in the continuation of [their] employment which is protected by due process.”
(Skelly, supra,
In
Barber,
the Supreme Court considered how to measure damages for a
Skelly
violation. In
Barber,
the plaintiff was dismissed without being provided an opportunity to address the allegations of misconduct; following a hearing, the Personnel Board sustained the dismissal.
(Barber, supra,
The Department contends that Roe is not entitled to any backpay after September 24, 1992, because he had an opportunity to respond to the accusations of misconduct at the
Skelly
hearing scheduled for that date but instead opted to resign. The Department relies on
Mitchell
v.
State Personnel Bd.
(1979)
*1041
Moreover, in
Barber,
the California Supreme Court rejected the argument that backpay ceases to accumulate “at the time the employee could reasonably have responded.”
(Barber, supra,
Equally unavailing is the Department’s contention that under
Coleman v. Department of Personnel Administration Services, supra,
The Department argues to limit backpay by its contention that the
Skelly
violation was cured for purposes of calculating backpay upon the filing of the first Personnel Board decision on February 2, 1994. In support of that argument, the Department cites
Ng
v.
State Personnel Bd.
(1977)
In contrast, Roe was not given an opportunity to be heard on the merits of the dismissal before the first Personnel Board decision because the Board only took evidence on the jurisdictional issue. The Department represents that Roe responded to the accusations of misconduct during the first proceeding, but the decision reflects that the Board did not receive any evidence or consider any argument on the merits. Therefore, the first hearing and decision did not cut off Roe’s entitlement to backpay because it did not cure the Department’s failure to provide Roe an opportunity to be heard on the merits.
Roe contends that only a Personnel Board decision upholding his dismissal can cut off his entitlement to backpay. We disagree. Although in both
Barber, supra,
IV. This Matter Must Be Remanded to the Personnel Board for a Determination of the Merits of the Department’s Charges of Misconduct *
*1043 DISPOSITION
The superior court judgment granting the petition for writ of mandate is affirmed in part and reversed in part. The superior court is directed to enter a new judgment granting the petition for writ of mandate and remanding this matter to the Personnel Board for the following limited purposes. The superior court shall direct the board to conduct proceedings to determine the amount of backpay due Roe for the Shelly violation for the period September 1, 1992, through May 5, 1999, and to award it forthwith. Further, as the Board has already heard the evidence on the merits, the superior court shall direct the Board to exercise its discretion and make a finding whether Roe’s dismissal was for good cause. Each party is to bear their own costs on appeal.
Jones, P. J., and Simons, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 20, 2004, and the nonpublished portion of the opinion was modified.
Notes
Government Code section 19570 defines “adverse action” to mean “dismissal, demotion, suspension, or other disciplinary action.”
Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Government Code.
The term refers to the individual authorized to hear the response of a permanent employee to proposed adverse employment action, pursuant to
Skelly v. State Personnel Bd.
(1975)
Under the version of section 19575 then in effect, Roe had 20 days from service of the notice to file an answer with the Personnel Board.
In a second appeal, this court subsequently held that Roe was entitled to attorney fees and costs for litigating the Roe I mandamus proceeding. (Roe v. State Personnel Bd. (Aug. 16, 2000, A086674) [nonpub. opn.] (Roe II).)
See footnote, ante, page 1029.
The Skelly officer turned the letter over to the government law section of the Department to handle. According to the Personnel Board, “Williamson believed that [Roe] was either terminated or on administrative leave at that point. Williamson was not aware whether an employee could resign during the Skelly period.” Roe believed that he had resigned, and he only learned in November from his union representative “that the Department took the position that he was dismissed on August 31, 1992.”
Section 19996.1, subdivision (a) provides in relevant part: “No resignation shall be set aside on the ground that it was given or obtained pursuant to or by reason of mistake, fraud, duress, undue influence or that for any other reason it was not the free, voluntary and binding act of the person resigning, unless a petition to set it aside is filed with the department within 30 days after the last date upon which services to the state are rendered or the date the resignation is tendered to the appointing power, whichever is later.”
Section 19140, subdivision (a), gives the state discretion to reinstate employees who have been separated from civil service by resignation or retirement, but not permanent employees who have been terminated for cause. In provides in relevant part: “an appointing power may, in his or her discretion, reinstate any person having probationary or permanent status who was separated from his or her position (1) by resignation, (2) by service retirement, (3) by termination from limited-term, temporary, career executive assignment, or exempt appointment, (4) under Section 19996.2, or (5) without a break in continuity of state service to accept another civil service or exempt appointment.”
The Department also pmports to quote language from
Lucas, supra,
The superior court awarded backpay through April 30, 1999, the date of issuance of the ALJ’s proposed decision. Under
Barber,
the date of the
Personnel Board’s
decision is controlling.
(Barber, supra,
See footnote, ante, page 1029.
